Happer on The Truth About Greenhouse Gases

The dubious science of the climate crusaders.

William Happer is the Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics at Princeton University.

The object of the Author in the following pages has been to collect the most remarkable instances of those moral epidemics which have been excited, sometimes by one cause and sometimes by another, and to show how easily the masses have been led astray, and how imitative and gregarious men are, even in their infatuations and crimes,” wrote Charles Mackay in the preface to the first edition of his Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. I want to discuss a contemporary moral epidemic: the notion that increasing atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases, notably carbon dioxide, will have disastrous consequences for mankind and for the planet. The “climate crusade” is one characterized by true believers, opportunists, cynics, money-hungry governments, manipulators of various types—even children’s crusades—all based on contested science and dubious claims.

I am a strong supporter of a clean environment. We need to be vigilant to keep our land, air, and waters free of real pollution, particulates, heavy metals, and pathogens, but carbon dioxide (CO2 ) is not one of these pollutants. Carbon is the stuff of life. Our bodies are made of carbon. A normal human exhales around 1 kg of CO2 (the simplest chemically stable molecule of carbon in the earth’s atmosphere) per day. Before the industrial period, the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere was 270 ppm. At the present time, the concentration is about 390 ppm, 0.039 percent of all atmospheric molecules and less than 1 percent of that in our breath. About fifty million years ago, a brief moment in the long history of life on earth, geological evidence indicates, CO2 levels were several thousand ppm, much higher than now. And life flourished abundantly.

Now the Environmental Protection Agency wants to regulate atmospheric CO2 as a “pollutant.” According to my Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary, to pollute is “to make or render unclean, to defile, to desecrate, to profane.” By breathing are we rendering the air unclean, defiling or desecrating it? Efforts are underway to remedy the old-fashioned, restrictive definition of pollution. The current Wikipedia entry on air pollution, for example, now asserts that pollution includes: “carbon dioxide (CO2)—a colorless, odorless, non-toxic greenhouse gas associated with ocean acidification, emitted from sources such as combustion, cement production, and respiration.”

As far as green plants are concerned, CO2 is not a pollutant, but part of their daily bread—like water, sunlight, nitrogen, and other essential elements. Most green plants evolved at CO2 levels of several thousand ppm, many times higher than now. Plants grow better and have better flowers and fruit at higher levels. Commercial greenhouse operators recognize this when they artificially increase the concentrations inside their greenhouses to over 1000 ppm.

Wallis Simpson, the woman for whom King Edward VIII renounced the British throne, supposedly said, “A woman can’t be too rich or too thin.” But in reality, you can get too much or too little of a good thing. Whether we should be glad or worried about increasing levels of CO2 depends on quantitative numbers, not just qualitative considerations.

How close is the current atmosphere to the upper or lower limit for CO2? Did we have just the right concentration at the preindustrial level of 270 ppm? Reading breathless media reports about CO2 “pollution” and about minimizing our carbon footprints, one might think that the earth cannot have too little CO2, as Simpson thought one couldn’t be too thin—a view which was also overstated, as we have seen from the sad effects of anorexia in so many young women. Various geo-engineering schemes are being discussed for scrubbing CO2 from the air and cleansing the atmosphere of the “pollutant.” There is no lower limit for human beings, but there is for human life. We would be perfectly healthy in a world with little or no atmospheric CO2—except that we would have nothing to eat and a few other minor inconveniences, because most plants stop growing if the levels drop much below 150 ppm. If we want to continue to be fed and clothed by the products of green plants, we can have too little CO2.

The minimum acceptable value for plants is not that much below the 270 ppm preindustrial value. It is possible that this is not enough, that we are better off with our current level, and would be better off with more still. There is evidence that California orange groves are about 30 percent more productive today than they were 150 years ago because of the increase of atmospheric CO2.

Although human beings and many other animals would do well with no CO2 at all in the air, there is an upper limit that we can tolerate. Inhaling air with a concentration of a few percent, similar to the concentration of the air we exhale, hinders the diffusional exchange of CO2 between the blood and gas in the lung. Both the United States Navy (for submariners) and nasa (for astronauts) have performed extensive studies of human tolerance to CO2. As a result of these studies, the Navy recommends an upper limit of about 8000 ppm for cruises of ninety days, and nasa recommends an upper limit of 5000 ppm for missions of one thousand days, both assuming a total pressure of one atmosphere. Higher levels are acceptable for missions of only a few days.

We conclude that atmospheric CO2 levels should be above 150 ppm to avoid harming green plants and below about 5000 ppm to avoid harming people. That is a very wide range, and our atmosphere is much closer to the lower end than to the upper end. The current rate of burning fossil fuels adds about 2 ppm per year to the atmosphere, so that getting from the current level to 1000 ppm would take about 300 years—and 1000 ppm is still less than what most plants would prefer, and much less than either the nasa or the Navy limit for human beings.

Yet there are strident calls for immediately stopping further increases in CO2 levels and reducing the current level. As we have discussed, animals would not even notice a doubling of CO2 and plants would love it. The supposed reason for limiting it is to stop global warming—or, since the predicted warming has failed to be nearly as large as computer models forecast, to stop climate change. Climate change itself has been embarrassingly uneventful, so another rationale for reducing CO2 is now promoted: to stop the hypothetical increase of extreme climate events like hurricanes or tornados. But this does not necessarily follow. The frequency of extreme events has either not changed or has decreased in the 150 years that CO2 levels have increased from 270 to 390 ppm.

Let me turn to some of the problems the non-pollutant CO2 is supposed to cause. More CO2 is supposed to cause flooded cities, parched agriculture, tropical diseases in Alaska, etc., and even an epidemic of kidney stones. It does indeed cause some warming of our planet, and we should thank Providence for that, because without the greenhouse warming of CO2 and its more potent partners, water vapor and clouds, the earth would be too cold to sustain its current abundance of life.

Other things being equal, more CO2 will cause more warming. The question is how much warming, and whether the increased CO2 and the warming it causes will be good or bad for the planet.

The argument starts something like this. CO2 levels have increased from about 280 ppm to 390 ppm over the past 150 years or so, and the earth has warmed by about 0.8 degree Celsius during that time. Therefore the warming is due to CO2. But correlation is not causation. Roosters crow every morning at sunrise, but that does not mean the rooster caused the sun to rise. The sun will still rise on Monday if you decide to have the rooster for Sunday dinner.

There have been many warmings and coolings in the past when the CO2 levels did not change. A well-known example is the medieval warming, about the year 1000, when the Vikings settled Greenland (when it was green) and wine was exported from England. This warm period was followed by the “little ice age” when the Thames would frequently freeze over during the winter. There is no evidence for significant increase of CO2 in the medieval warm period, nor for a significant decrease at the time of the subsequent little ice age. Documented famines with millions of deaths occurred during the little ice age because the cold weather killed the crops. Since the end of the little ice age, the earth has been warming in fits and starts, and humanity’s quality of life has improved accordingly.

A rare case of good correlation between CO2 levels and temperature is provided by ice-core records of the cycles of glacial and interglacial periods of the last million years of so. But these records show that changes in temperature preceded changes in CO2 levels, so that the levels were an effect of temperature changes. This was probably due to outgassing of CO2 from the warming oceans and the reverse effect when they cooled.

The most recent continental ice sheets began to melt some twenty thousand years ago. During the “Younger Dryas” some 12,000 years ago, the earth very dramatically cooled and warmed by as much as 10 degrees Celsius in fifty years.

The earth’s climate has always been changing. Our present global warming is not at all unusual by the standards of geological history, and it is probably benefiting the biosphere. Indeed, there is very little correlation between the estimates of CO2 and of the earth’s temperature over the past 550 million years (the “Phanerozoic” period). The message is clear that several factors must influence the earth’s temperature, and that while CO2 is one of these factors, it is seldom the dominant one. The other factors are not well understood. Plausible candidates are spontaneous variations of the complicated fluid flow patterns in the oceans and atmosphere of the earth—perhaps influenced by continental drift, volcanoes, variations of the earth’s orbital parameters (ellipticity, spin-axis orientation, etc.), asteroid and comet impacts, variations in the sun’s output (not only the visible radiation but the amount of ultraviolet light, and the solar wind with its magnetic field), variations in cosmic rays leading to variations in cloud cover, and other causes.

The existence of the little ice age and the medieval warm period were an embarrassment to the global-warming establishment, because they showed that the current warming is almost indistinguishable from previous warmings and coolings that had nothing to do with burning fossil fuel. The organization charged with producing scientific support for the climate change crusade, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), finally found a solution. They rewrote the climate history of the past 1000 years with the celebrated “hockey stick” temperature record.

The first IPCC report, issued in 1990, showed both the medieval warm period and the little ice age very clearly. In the IPCC’s 2001 report was a graph that purported to show the earth’s mean temperature since the year 1000. A yet more extreme version of the hockey stick graph made the cover of the Fiftieth Anniversary Report of the United Nation’s World Meteorological Organization. To the surprise of everyone who knew about the strong evidence for the little ice age and the medieval climate optimum, the graph showed a nearly constant temperature from the year 1000 until about 150 years ago, when the temperature began to rise abruptly like the blade of a hockey stick. The inference was that this was due to the anthropogenic “pollutant” CO2.

This damnatia memoriae of inconvenient facts was simply expunged from the 2001 IPCC report, much as Trotsky and Yezhov were removed from Stalin’s photographs by dark-room specialists in the later years of the dictator’s reign. There was no explanation of why both the medieval warm period and the little ice age, very clearly shown in the 1990 report, had simply disappeared eleven years later.

The rest of the article is here

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R. Gates
May 21, 2011 3:07 pm

u.k.(us) says:
May 21, 2011 at 1:41 pm
R. Gates says:
May 21, 2011 at 11:22 am
….”We know that the hydrological cycle is greatly dependent on the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.”…..
==========
This is news to me, do you have data to back it up?
(that CO2 is the driver).
_____
The rock-carbon cycle and it’s connection to the hydrological cycle is a huge missing piece to William Happers contention that human life would not be harmed by higher CO2 levels. But to your point, there are many good recent studies done on the connection between CO2, warmer temps, and the acceleration of the hydrological cycle. I would suggest you begin here:
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/09/28/1003292107.full.pdf+html
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/greenspace/2010/10/global-warming-river-flows-oceans-climate-disruption.html
http://www.iac.ethz.ch/groups/schaer/research/rad_and_hydro_cycle_global
http://www.waterandclimateinformationcentre.org/resources/8022007_Huntington2006_JHy.pdf
___
Again, some plants may like higher CO2 levels, and some may not, but the bigger issue is whether or not the climate will change to such an extent that growing enough grains on a large enough scale will be possible to feed 7 Billion people if there are frequent heavy rains or droughts around the world.

R. Gates
May 21, 2011 3:16 pm

Fred H. Haynie says:
May 21, 2011 at 1:32 pm
To R. Gates,
The processes of evaporation/condensation and freezing/thawing are the climate controlling factors that also control the natural level of atmospheric CO2. CO2 is not a controlling factor and is just going along for the ride. There is a correlation between global temperature and CO2 and CO2 can be used as an indicator of a global change in climate. However, it is a lagging indicator. Global temperatures rise and fall ahead of atmospheric CO2 concentrations. The myth of CAGW has nothing to do with these natural processes. CAGW was created to give some excuse to globally control the distribution and use of fossil fuels as a source of energy
______
You fail to mention the tight connection between the rock-carbon cycle and the hydrological cycle. This is all about carbon and all about a long term cycle the controls the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. From the earth’s perspective, carbon dioxide is hardly just a minor trace gas, but because it is non-condensing, and is not taken out of the atmosphere by simply lowering the temperature, it become the master thermostat of the planet. Water vapor is a strong GH gas, but is quickly condensed out when temps fall, so a slight cooling trend would be a positive feedback and be accelerated as water vapor is condensed out, whereas CO2 remains far more constant, and is only taken out of the atmosphere on a longer term basis by the weathering of rocks.

Girma
May 21, 2011 3:37 pm

William
A joy to read article.
Thank you.

ferd berple
May 21, 2011 3:52 pm

If CO2 cause warming, then why do all the models predict a tropical hot spot, yet it is clear from observation that no such hot spot exists. In any other branch of science, that would constitute falsification of the theory of greenhouse gas global warming.
Why do we continue to say that CO2 causes warming, when the predictions do not match the observations?
The reason is simple. The earth is 33 degrees hotter than predicted. This extra warming is assumed to result from greenhouse gas. However, this is only an assumption.
There is an ocean of nitrogen and oxygen over our heads. The theory of greenhouse gas says that this has no effect on the surface temperature of the earth. That the full 33 degrees of extra warming results from a minute amount of H2O and even smaller amount of CO2.
Is that reasonable? Why then does the atmosphere cool with altitude? Gravity controls the temperature difference of the air (lapse rate), and the air is in contact with the surface, how is it that gravity is not affecting the temperature of the surface? Why is gravity not accounted for in the greehouse gas theory?

ferd berple
May 21, 2011 4:06 pm

“acidification” of the oceans is scientifically incorrect. Adding a small amount of acid to a large amount of base is called “neutralization”.
Adding CO2 to the oceans is correctly called “neutralization”. Given the large amount of salt (buffer) in the ocean, it would require a fantastic amount of CO2 to render the ocean acidic. The great deposits of limestone around the world were built from CO2 and ocean salts.

ferd berple
May 21, 2011 4:19 pm

“the human population is exhaling around 2.5 billion tons of CO2 per year.”
That looks correct. People breathing produce 5 time more CO2 than does the entire UK economy. 6 times more CO2 than the entire Australian economy.
So, if you want to get rid of CO2 polution, really the problem is people breathing.

tonyb
Editor
May 21, 2011 4:27 pm

R Gates said;
“Our civilization is based on somewhat stable and predictable weather, which we have generally seen during the holocene with a generally steady and predictable hydrological cycle that has allowed for agriculture to be developed and practiced.”
On what do you base those assertions?
tonyb

May 21, 2011 4:28 pm

The EPA says greenhouse gases are pollution. If only we could get rid of all that greenhouse pollution! Who needs a stinkin atmosphere!

Dr. Dave
May 21, 2011 4:40 pm

richard telford says:
May 21, 2011 at 2:12 pm
“… and you never use a dictionary to find out what acidification means. So let me save you the effort: acidification means a decline in pH. That’s all. But if you want to call it dealkalinification, be my guest…”
___________________________________________________________
I presume you never learned about buffered solutions. Have you any idea of the amount of acid required to significantly change global ocean pH? Did you ever take basic inorganic chemistry?

May 21, 2011 4:44 pm

gbaikie says:
May 21, 2011 at 3:06 pm
So we had a centuries long period of cooling in which crops failed….
Sallie Ballunis, astrophysicist at the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, with a short talk on how bad the Little Ice Age got and how humans turn on humans through superstition.
7:39 video

Douglas
May 21, 2011 4:57 pm

richard telford says:
May 21, 2011 at 2:42 pm
Douglas says:
May 21, 2011 at 2:09 pm
Perhaps you might define and describe the extent the forcing that affected the earth’s climate during the MWP.
——————————-
During the MWP there were, by chance, few large volcanic eruptions (see the ice-core sulphate records for evidence), and slightly stronger solar output (see Be-10 and C-14 records). There were also changes in ocean and atmospheric circulation, which were probably far more important in determining local climate change, and make it difficult to determine the global extent of the MWP.
———————————————————————————
So, let me see then, if it weren’t for volcanic eruptions and stronger solar output then things would be warmer since the MWP. And just what were these changes in ocean and atmospheric circulation that seemingly ‘muddies the water’ sufficiently for you to tell me anything at all.
Wunderbar.
Douglas

Douglas
May 21, 2011 5:00 pm

ferd berple says:
May 21, 2011 at 4:19 pm
[“the human population is exhaling around 2.5 billion tons of CO2 per year.”—-
So, if you want to get rid of CO2 polution, really the problem is people breathing.]
——————————————————————
Well ferd, that seems to be the bottom line in the agenda.
Douglas

Old Engineer
May 21, 2011 5:50 pm

Gareth Phillips says:
May 21, 2011 at 9:32 am
Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics .
Are you sure?
=============================================================
Perhaps you would like to see it from the horse’s mouth, so to speak. The link below is Dr. Happer’s testimony before the Senate Enivronment and Public Works Committee on Feb. 25, 2009.
http://scienceandpublicpolicy.org/reprint/happer_senate_testimony.html
It says in part:
“Madam Chairman and members, thank you for the opportunity to appear before the Committee on Environment and Public Works to testify on Climate Change. My name is William Happer, and I am the Cyrus Fogg Bracket Professor of Physics at Princeton University.”

May 21, 2011 8:23 pm

It is good to see articles on this site moving beyond the “its not happening” stage to the “its happening, but won’t be bad” stage. Baby steps are still steps. Thank you.

u.k.(us)
May 21, 2011 8:42 pm

R. Gates says:
May 21, 2011 at 3:16 pm
=============
What’s the point of arguing, when you don’t make an effort?

andy
May 21, 2011 9:00 pm

What does he mean by the “created world” at the end of the essay ?

R. Gates
May 21, 2011 9:09 pm

tonyb says:
May 21, 2011 at 4:27 pm
R Gates said;
“Our civilization is based on somewhat stable and predictable weather, which we have generally seen during the holocene with a generally steady and predictable hydrological cycle that has allowed for agriculture to be developed and practiced.”
On what do you base those assertions?
tonyb
—————
It’s called history. The Holocene has been one of the most stable climate regimes in the past several million years and during that time, CO2 has been far below what we have now. This stable period saw the advent of large scale agriculture and civilization. Wheat for example, was first domesticated about 9,000 BC, and is of course one of the major food crops and a reason there even can be civilization. The rapid increase in CO2 in the few hundred years may result in a disruption of the weather patterns through changes in the hydrological cycle that could be detrimental to the large scale production of many grains and other food crops. The suggestion that CO2 at 1000 ppm would good for human life and civilization in unsupported by the historical record.

R. Gates
May 21, 2011 9:15 pm

u.k.(us) says:
May 21, 2011 at 8:42 pm
R. Gates says:
May 21, 2011 at 3:16 pm
=============
What’s the point of arguing, when you don’t make an effort?
——–
My reply at 3:07 on May 21st should have given you hours, if not days of research links into the role of carbon dioxide in both the hydrological cycle as well as the carbon-rock weathering cycle. I am thinking you’re not really interested in learning, but simple want to stick to the skeptical talking points…

May 21, 2011 9:57 pm

R. Gates says:
May 21, 2011 at 9:09 pm
The Holocene has been one of the most stable climate regimes in the past several million years and during that time, CO2 has been far below what we have now.

You must be joking.
“Far below” “in the past several million years” — and all this time R. Gates was patiently taking measurements.
(Just don’t mention ice core samples. Don’t. We know all about them. We know how unreliable they are, and how their interpreters are at each others throat all the time.)

robt
May 21, 2011 10:12 pm

Engchamp, acidification is standard terminology and the activist AGW people know it will confuse some people but when the ignorati in the press write articles about the acid seas eating away coral reefs and shells, they remain quiet, while at the same time complaining that they can’t get their message across. It also gives people like richard telford the opportunity to rub your nose in it if you offer the chance.

onbe
May 21, 2011 10:25 pm

Kelvin Vaughan says:
May 21, 2011 at 2:01 pm
I keep asking this question but no one has answered it yet: Do co2 enhanced greenhouses need less heating than a greenhouse with normal levels of co2?
—————————–
It is a guess but I would say no. The day to night temps on Mars vary greatly with it’s rich CO2 environment.

Christopher Hanley
May 21, 2011 10:40 pm

richard telford: “..never become old, just less young; and never fat, just less thin; and never poor, but less rich….[etc]”
I’ll try that with the bank next time I get into overdraft: ‘no I’m not in debt, sir, just less in credit’.

May 21, 2011 10:53 pm

This is the best article on climate change I have ever seen. It is comprehensive,it discusses objectively the problem from all possible aspects. For me the herd mentality was a new but interesting point.

May 21, 2011 10:54 pm

R Gates is as ignorant of history as TonyB is up to speed on the subject. Really, Gates spouts complete nonsense based on his cognitive dissonance-afflicted belief system; a true nut case if there ever was one.
People are better off now than they have ever been before in human history; the climate is more benign now than any prior time in human history, and Machiavellian Luddites like Gates are as disconnected from reality as anyone ever was.
Against all the evidence, cognitively disconnected people like Gates actually believe that runaway global warming and climate catastrophe is right around the corner. Truly bizarre.

Professor Bob Ryan
May 21, 2011 11:43 pm

A very nice general article which summarises the contrary position to CAGW well. It touches on two themes in particular which are not regularly addressed:
(i) Is there an ideal level of CO2 in the atmosphere which will support the replenishment of the planet’s biomass and were preindustrial levels at that optimum level? We do not know the answer to this question.
(ii) CO2 is seen as the principal forcing explaining the uplift in global mean temperature between 1970 – 2000. The reason for choosing this particular forcing is that there are no other obvious candidates. The problem with this line of argument is that (a) we do not know what other forcings there might be, (b) for those we do (eg: clouds and precipitation) we do not know the full magnitude of their effect and (c) we do not know the full range of interaction between different forcings (sensitivities). If there was a satisfactory justification for the variations in global temperature during the MWP and the so called little ice age then I would be more willing to give credence to the explanations given for the modern warming. But as all of the effort seems to have been put in trying to prove that the MWP and the ice age did not exist when the historical evidence is abundant in asserting they did then I remain skeptical about the claims made for the role of co2.

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